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Nigeria:The Birth of Africa’s Greatest Country chronicles the social...
Michael Peel, a correspondent for the financial times has told the...
Ironsi was Nigeria’s first military Head of State. He was killed in...
In a humorous way, Nigerians In Theory tries to depict the full richness...
This House of Oduduwa Must Not Fall represents a quest to share the...
The book contains essays written by four generations of Nigerian...
The Tragedy of Victory: On-the-Spot Account of the Nigeria-Biafra War in...
Which sort of seducer could you be? Siren? Rake? Cold Coquette? Star?...
Never Quite the Insider is an account that goes where very few...
From revolution on Twitter [X]to romance on Tinder, we live in a world...
Although Nigeria's Fourth Republic has survived longer than any of the...
In this thoughtful and elegantly written book, Kingsley Chiedu Moghalu explodes the myths and conventional wisdoms about Africa's quest for economic growth in a globalised world with a paradigm-shift perspective on the continent's future. Paper back pages: 399
The book is the truth about the worrisome circumstances Nigeria finds itself.
So often, Africa has been depicted simplistically as a uniform land of famines and safaris, poverty and strife, stripped of all nuance. In this bold and insightful book, Dipo Faloyin offers a much-needed corrective, weaving a vibrant tapestry of stories that bring to life Africa’s rich diversity, communities, and histories.
What did Mozart and Bach, Oscar Wilde and Anthony Trollope, George Washington and Frederick the Great, Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt have in common? They were all Freemasons, a secret society that has been the subject of endless fascination.
It is said that the secrets of great men are in their stories. These words are proven profoundly true in Makinde’s generous exposé of his last conversation with the great Chief Obafemi Awolowo.
This book is a narrative of the life and times of one of the most profound and unarguably, one of the most original Yoruba musicians of post-colonial Nigeria.
In this groundbreaking work, the Nobel Peace Prize-winner and founder of the Green Belt Movement offers a new perspective on the troubles facing Africa today. Too often these challenges are portrayed by the media in extreme terms connoting poverty, dependence, and desperation.
In this vast and vivid panorama of history, Martin Meredith, bestselling author of The State of Africa, follows the fortunes of Africa over a period of 5,000 years.
In The World for Sale, two leading journalists lift the lid on one of the least scrutinised corners of the economy: the workings of the billionaire commodity traders who buy, hoard and sell the earth’s resources.
Why does the future of democracy seem uncertain on the continent? The achievement of this book is to provide answers to this question. First, the book reasons that the democratization processes on the continent are moving forward backwards, in that the preconditions for continued sustainability of democracy are absent and not plentiful in almost all...
The narrative behind what carried Nigeria and Nigerians to the present stage in world football is a fascinating one. This book tries to explain how it happened in its early formation as an example of the dispersion, adaptation and indigenisation of British sporting culture in an outpost of Empire.
What follows in this book is the general direction which the military administration in Nigeria pursued from July 1975 to October 1979, a period that marked a watershed and created a significant landmark in the political and socio-economic life of Nigeria.